(Payvand.com) - Announcing the first documentary highlighting the life and
career of the woman some call "Persia's Maria Callas," the late singer, Hayedeh
(1942-1990).

The
documentary contains an extensive review of Hayedeh's artistic activities,
including rare videos, audio clips, photos, and interviews with the main figures
of her career. During the course of the film, we hear from Andranik, the
songwriter Mohammad Heydari, producer Manouchehr Bibiyan, conductor Farnoush
Behzad, music critic Mahmoud Khoshnam, and the last Persian queen Farah Pahlavi.

The documentary, "Hayedeh, Legendary Persian
Diva," was made by
Pejman Akbarzadeh (28) a Netherlands-based pianist, journalist, and author
of a 4-volume book about 20th-century Persian musicians.

Pejman was a 9-year old child in Shiraz when the singer passed away in exile. He
did not even know Hayedeh at that time. The reaction of his family and others
around him to the diva's death brought his attention to her voice. As a child,
Pejman was deeply moved by Hayedeh's voice. "I spent years listening to her
singing. Although she was a singer, and I am a pianist, her voice inspired my
music very much".

Pejman finally came to the conclusion that was his 'duty' to do so something
great for Hayedeh, an icon in Persian vocal music. He spent years doing
research, traveling from Tehran to Los Angeles in order to track down the story
of the singer. He analyzed various aspects of Hayedeh's work and gathered
together many never-before-released materials.

The Persian-Dutch filmmaker Mostafa Heravi edited the 100-minute documentary.
"It was a rare opportunity to work with him. Not only because of his
professional editing but because of his insights, which made the documentary
more attractive," Pejman added.

"Hayedeh, Legendary Persian Diva" was partly supported by the Radio Zamaneh
Foundation and will be premiered at
Griffioen Cultural Center in Amsterdam on 24th January 2009.

Since the 1979 revolution in Persia (Iran), which
brought a fundamentalist religious government to power, women have not been
allowed to sing in public. All Persian women singers were forced to end their
careers and many of them moved abroad to sing. Hayedeh was one of those who fled
Iran.

Hayedeh began her career in the mid-1960s. She studied Persian vocal music with
various masters such as the legendary violinist and songwriter Ali Tajvidi at
Radio Tehran. For more than 20 years she performed both Persian classical and
pop music. Her extraordinary powerful and tragic voice led some to describe her
as the Persian Maria Callas.

Revolution and immigration to the West added a new dimension to Hayedeh's
career. She sang of the pain of exile and oppression of the people inside her
country. Her songs reflected the despair of the eight-year Iran-Iraq war. This
empathy made her even more beloved among most Persians.

During the course of her career, Hayedeh performed at London's Royal Albert
Hall, Musikhalle Hamburg, the UCLA's Schoenberg Hall, among other major venues.

Hayedeh's unexpected death in exile at the age of 47 was a shock for the entire
nation.